Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson argue in Abundance that politicians can not be satisfied with merely passing policy. They need to attend to actual outcomes by looking for and overcoming obstacles.
“The US faces complex challenges in housing, energy, science policy, invention, and innovation… Figuring out how to build more apartments in Los Angeles might not be relevant to the problem of adding solar energy in Massachusetts, which has nothing to do with the question of how to accelerate scientific discovery in cancer. To be a bottleneck detective is to recognize that wise policy begins with an investigation rather than an ideology.”
With all the buzz about the “Abundance agenda,” it’s surprising no one mentions the established tools and mindsets for spotting and fixing bottlenecks. Called improvement science or continuous improvement in education, quality improvement in healthcare, and lean six sigma in industry, it’s an approach that helps one become more disciplined and more systematic. It also involves getting deep into understanding processes that are getting in the way of better outcomes. You can read more about how we’re doing that work in education here: https://hthgse.edu/ncie/
If we want better government, we need improvement methods.
My point is, if you’re interested in making government work better so that we can save the Republic, DM me.